George Bryant brought a petition in equity in Bibb Superior Court against Earl Lee Cotton Bryant. The petition as amended was in two counts. In the first count it was alleged: The parties entered into a ceremonial marriage on September 2, 1956. At the time of the purported marriage, and unknown to the petitioner, the defendant was married to James Nathaniel Cotton. The defendant filed a petition for divorce against James Nathaniel Cotton in 1949, but the petition was dismissed on March 21, 1955, for want of prosecution. The petitioner, upon discovering the fact of the prior marriage of the defendant, separated from her and has not lived with her since that time. There were no children bom or to be bom of the purported marriage.
Count 2 incorporated the allegations of count 1 as to the purported marriage of the parties, and the prior existing marriage of the defendant, and alleged further: At the time of the purported marriage, the petitioner was the owner of property in Bibb County. After the purported marriage, he placed a one-half interest in the property in the name of the defendant, the only consideration being love and affection. The defendant obtained the one-half interest through fraud and misrepresentation, since at the time of the conveyance she actively misrepresented her true marital status to him, and it was because he had been led to believe that she was his lawful wife that she obtained the one-half interest in the property.
*764 The prayers were: that a decree of annulment be granted, declaring the purported marriage between the parties null and void; that the deed be declared absolutely null and void, and the full interest be vested in the petitioner; and for further relief. The general and special demurrers of the defendant were overruled, and the exception is to this judgment. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.
Section 1 of the Annulment Statute (Ga. L. 1952, p. 149;
Code Ann. Su-p-p.
§ 53-601), provides: “Annulment of marriages now or hereafter declared void by law may be granted by the superior court judges of this State, except that annulments may not be granted in instances where children are born or to be bom as a result of the marriage.” The case on which the petitioner relies,
Gearllach v. Odom,
In
Collins v. Collins,
The fraud perpetrated by a woman in manying at a time when she knows that she has a living husband from whom she has not been divorced, such fact being unknown to the man whom she purports to many, needs no amplification as to the statements made by her in regard to her marital status. The fact of entering into the ceremony without disclosing her true marital status is a fraud on her purported husband, who is ignorant of such status. The petition in the present case was sufficient to state a cause of action in equity for the cancellation of the deed by the petitioner to the defendant.
By special demurrers the defendant asserted that the petition attempts to join two separate and distinct causes of action, in one count a cause of action for annulment, and in the other a cause of action to obtain title to land. The petition was brought in Bibb County, the alleged residence of the defendant, and the county in which the land is located. A party may seek both legal and equitable relief in the same action.
Mims v. Lifsey,
Judgment affirmed.
